Educ 3
Educ 3
DIMENSIONS OF
LEARNING
Objectives
Discover
Discuss
Explain
Introduction
Learning is influenced by social
interactions, interpersonal relations, and
communication with others. Learning can
be enhanced when the learner has an
opportunity to interact and to collaborate
with others on instructional tasks.
Learning settings that allow social
interactions, and respect for diversity
encourage flexible thinking and social
competence.
Family
Social Constructivism
Scaffolding
An important concept for social constructivists is that of
Scaffolding which is process of guiding the learner
from what is presently known to what is to be known.
For Vygotsky, Scaffolding is the process of providing a
child or adolescent with a good deal of support during
the time they are learning something. This support is
reduced as the learners becomes able to deal with the
task independently resulting in his taking on increasing
responsibility for his learning. Support for a learner can
take the form of cooperative learning environments, or
strategies for helping students organize new material
and relate it to prior knowledge. Vygotsky particularly
emphasized the ways in which adult support and
learning among peers could assist children and
adolescents to master concepts they could not yet learn
alone.
Culture
Developme
nt
Social
Interacti
on
Languag
e
guiding
the
development
of
classroom
1.
2.
3.
4.
Elements of Situated
Situated
learning places the learner in the center of an
Learning
Content. Situated learning emphasizes higherorder thinking processes rather than the acquisition of
facts independent of the real lives of the participants
(Choi and Hannafin, 1995). Content situated in
learners daily experiences becomes the means to
engage in reflective thinking (Shor, 1996). Retention of
content is not the goal of learning. By placing content
with the daily transactions of life, the instructor, in
dialogue with learners, negotiates the meaning of
content, frames it in terms of the issues and concerns
within the learners, provides opportunities for learners
to cooperate in investigating problem situations, and
makes content applicable to the ways in which learners
will approach the environment. Application rather than
retention becomes the mark of a sound instructional
encounter.